"Brazil, as the biggest and most advanced producer of
 BioEthanol, has already shown the world how to produce
 large volumes of ethanol, without any subsidies,
 at a lower cost than the world market price of gasoline." 

 "In a comprehensive 2004 study,
 the International Energy Agency,
 an OECD organization, estimates there is enough
 global resource of biomass for biofuels such as
 ethanol to meet two thirds of the world's current
 energy needs for transport."


 Saab Backs Ethanol As Next-Step Towards Sustainable Mobility
 2005/4/20
 http://www.autospectator.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1191

 As the automobile motors into its second century, it is
 fast approaching a crossroads where crucial decisions
 must be made about the future direction of fuel requirements.
 To initiate the move towards sustainable mobility and to
 overcome our dependence on fossil fuels, Saab believes that
 ethanol is a viable direction in which to move.

 Saab Automobile Managing Director Jan-Ake Jonsson believes
 Sweden is in a position to lead Europe's switch to the
 wide-scale production and use of BioEthanol, a renewable
 energy carrier that has the potential to meet the fuel
 requirements for sustainable mobility.

 [image] Saab 9-5 Wagon, 2.0t BioPower

 The brand is supporting EU and Swedish government initiatives
 to encourage ethanol consumption by launching its first
 flexible-fuel vehicle (FFV) on the Swedish market. The
 Saab 9-5 BioPower runs on BioEthanol-based E85 fuel or
 pure gasoline in any combination. First customer
 deliveries begin in June.

 "In the near-term, I am convinced that ethanol is a
 viable solution to our transport needs," says Jonsson.
 "It does not require the introduction of expensive new
 technology, cars can and are already using it, and
 it can be easily distributed within our existing
 supply infrastructure." 
 
 BioEthanol-fuelled vehicles are part of
 three-pronged approach in General Motors'
 overall propulsion strategy. In the
 near-term, improvements to its gasoline and diesel engines and
 transmissions, as well as the use of renewable fuels ö like
 BioEthanol ö provide the first step. Energy efficient
 hybrid vehicles will be the next step and
 fuel cells powered by hydrogen - preferable to
 renewable sources such as BioEthanal - will offer
 the ultimate environmental answer.

 Global perspective

 Saab considers there to be two non-negotiable driving
 forces behind the adoption of a renewable fuel such as
 BioEthanol: the environmental need to combat the
 so-called 'greenhouse', or climate change, effect and
 the need to overcome our dependence on oil, a
 finite resource where the rapid growth of
 global demand will exceed supply.

 Emissions of fossil carbon dioxide (CO2) from
 road transportation are widely recognized as a
 major cause of the 'greenhouse' effect, which is
 responsible for climate change and all its
 associated problems. In Sweden, for example,
 close to 40 per cent of CO2 emissions are due to
 transport. And globally, this trend is accelerating
 as vehicle numbers continue to grow. The
 World Business Council for Sustainable Development
 estimates that in the next 25 years the world's vehicle
 population will double, largely due to huge growth in
 China and developing economies.

 Why Ethanol

 Cars running on BioEthanol, which is produced from
 agricultural crops, sugar cane or bio-mass, are
 governed by the same law of physics as those using gasoline.
 That means both emit CO2, as an inevitable consequence of
 the combustion process. But there is a crucial difference:
 burning ethanol, in effect, recycles the CO2 because it has
 already been removed from the atmosphere by photosynthesis
 during the natural growth process. In contrast, the use of
 gasoline or diesel injects into the atmosphere additional
 new quantities of CO2 which have lain fixed underground in
 oil deposits for millions of years.

 A long-standing natural balance in global CO2 levels began
 to change more than a century ago, with the advent of
 industrialization built on the use of fossil energy. A
 UN body, the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC),
 estimates that this process is largely responsible for today's
 predicament through generating a 35 per cent increase in the
 global level of atmospheric CO2.

 In seeking alternative energy sources, a reduction of such
 'fossil CO2' is therefore essential. Saab believes the adoption
 of BioEthanol can play a crucial role. It is already produced
 commercially from corn in the United States and from sugar cane
 in Brazil, where General Motors do Brazil markets its unique
 Chevrolet Astra 2.0i Multipower sedan, which can run on
 ethanol, gasoline and even compressed natural gas (CNG).

 Brazil, as the biggest and most advanced producer of BioEthanol,
 has already shown the world how to produce large volumes of
 ethanol, without any subsidies, at a lower cost than the
 world market price of gasoline. In Sweden, ethanol is
 currently produced commercially from wheat and at
 ETEK's (Etanolteknik AB) R&D pilot plant at …rnskšldsvik,
 an industrial process for producing it from wood and
 forest residues is being developed for large-scale
 commercial applications. The Canadian company, IOGEN,
 with support from Shell, is also developing new
 production processes for biomass-based ethanol.
 In a comprehensive 2004 study, the International Energy Agency,
 an OECD organization, estimates there is enough
 global resource of biomass for biofuels such as
 ethanol to meet two thirds of the world's current
 energy needs for transport.

 To remove fossil CO2 completely from the environmental loop,
 emissions during the commercial production of ethanol must
 also be minimized and modern processes are already moving
 towards a zero emission status. Success in achieving this
 will depend on the type of biomass raw material and
 production processes that are used. The ETEK plant is
 targeting, from a life cycle perspective, the
 zero fossil emission production of BioEthanol. 

 Europe's role

 The EU's latest directive on energy taxation,
 effective from 1 January last year, calls on
 member states to apply reduced taxation or
 a complete exemption for bio-fuels
 in pure or low blends. It follows a
 parallel directive requiring member states to
 introduce measures by the end of this year
 that will ensure bio-fuels account for
 at least 2 per cent of total gasoline and diesel
 consumption in the transport sector,
 increasing steadily to 5.75 per cent by 2010.

 "The generally high environmental awareness
 within our society, together with the work at
 ETEK in …rnskšldsvik and other Swedish initiatives,
 place Sweden in a position to lead the
 European development of BioEthanol as a
 near and mid-term solution," adds Jonsson.

 Current developments in Sweden include the
 introduction of city buses running on pure ethanol,
 tax incentives and free parking for users of
 flex-fuel cars and the market-driven establishment of
 more than 160 filling stations selling E85 fuel.
 The government has also announced that,
 by 2008, 25 percent of the country's filling stations
 will be mandated to offer renewable fuels. And
 from this year, governmental agencies are required to
 source at least 50 percent of cars as eco-friendly vehicles.

 "The Swedish government and its agencies are to be
 congratulated in rising to the challenge. At Saab,
 we too are making a contribution in developing our
 9-5 BioPower model for the Swedish market," says
 Jonsson. "We will also be providing demonstrator cars
 for promotional activities in other European markets
 as a way of stimulating infrastructure development.

 "Ethanol provides an effective first step.
 It is a bridge that can lead us from
 obsolete fossil fuels towards new,
 sustainable technologies that are still under development,
 such as BioHydrogen fuel-cell vehicles.

 "We have reached a turning point where
 action must be taken if we are to avoid a
 crisis in meeting our future,
 sustainable energy needs for transport."
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